Jill Ruby-Wahba, Art Therapy, Marriage and Family Therapy

Jill Ruby-Wahba, Art Therapy, Marriage and Family Therapy Traditional verbal and non-verbal psychotherapy to improve relationship dynamics and work through history of trauma or addiction.

05/02/2025

I will be closing this page, I am not a social media maven, and terrible about reponding to inquiries on this platform.
Please take care.

04/17/2025

When children are unhappy at school and are reluctant to go in, this is often framed as ‘anxiety’. This means that the child’s emotions are assumed to be the problem, the thing which is stopping them from happily attending school. Mostly, adults will assume that they are anxious about something (school) which is not scary and so the work of parents and professionals is to change how they feel so that they can go back to school and everyone can relax. This is an approach which has serious drawbacks.

Because we have decided that the problem is their anxiety, the interventions offered are emotional ones. Interventions are offered which assume that if only the child stopped being anxious, there would no longer be a problem with school, and so the child has an anxiety disorder. Children are referred to health professionals (if they are lucky) who follow the protocols for treating anxiety disorders. They try hard to teach them anxiety management strategies and to challenge their beliefs about school. The treatment for anxiety is typically to do the thing you’re anxious about – so that means, if you’re anxious about school, you must go to school. If you’re anxious about hot coals, walk over the coals. Did it once and it hurt? Do it again.

Parents are told not to allow their child to avoid school, as (they are told) this will bring short term relief but in the long term will make things worse. They’re told to increase the ‘pull’ to school by being firm and making it clear that school is not optional. They’re told to increase the ‘push’ from home by not doing anything interesting with their children at home or sometimes even hardly interacting with them during school hours.

It all sounds fine on paper. A bit of gentle encouragement, some firm boundaries and perhaps a sticker chart, and all will be well again. Your child will skip happily into school. This difficult time will be over.

This advice works for some, but not for all. And for those for whom it doesn’t work, the advice is often to keep on doing the same thing. Keep on pushing. Keep making home boring, keep on presenting a united front with the school. Just keep going.

This causes untold damage.

Parents tell me that the ‘don’t let them avoid’ advice in practice means ‘force them to go in’. They tell me that children are peeled off them screaming and that the agony goes on for years. This is not how an anxiety intervention is meant to look. It is not therapeutic. Trust me on this one, I’m a therapist. We don’t treat anxiety by making a person face their anxiety against their will, time after time, when it’s abundantly clear that the anxiety is getting worse not better. Parents tell me that their whole family is in crisis, that their children wake every night begging not to go to school and that Sundays are shrouded with dread. They tell me that their children aren’t learning, not because they aren’t in school, but because every waking moment is spent highly anxious and aroused, worried about whether they will be forced to go in tomorrow. And that is not a good state to learn.

What’s missing is the recognition that school in its current form is not a place where every child can thrive. What’s missing is the understanding that there might be no ‘disorder’ here at all, that the child’s distress might be a reasonable reaction to circumstances. There’s no discussion of the shaming behavioural strategies, how anxiety is used to motivate or the way that children are actively prevented from playing in order to spend their time sitting at a desk. There’s no reference to the fact that many find the constant pressure and lack of privacy hard to manage. There’s no space to ask whether the developmental needs of this child are being met, or whether they feel cared for and valued. There is no recognition that school is set up so some children will fail, that the constant comparisons do not always work to motivate, because what some children learn is that they will never be good enough. This is inevitable, it’s how the system is designed. They cannot all be winners.

All of this is invisible when we decide the problem is an anxiety disorder. The focus on the child’s emotions as the forum for change lets the system off the hook. It stops us from asking questions about the constant flow of children whose unhappiness is so profound that it makes them ill. It stops us from asking difficult questions about whether our education system is fit for purpose. It stops us pushing back and asking for change.

Instead, we focus on the child who says No. We say that this is the problem, and they must instead say Yes. More than that, they must be made to see that Yes is the right answer, the only answer and that even just thinking of saying No was a very bad idea. One which, some of them are told, might put their parents in prison. Oddly, this doesn’t make them feel less anxious.

Emotions are there for a reason. They alert us when something isn’t right in our environment. Anxiety is a warning signal. There’s nothing wrong with a person who doesn’t want to walk across hot coals and of course it would make you anxious if you were forced. One might even say that those who refuse are clear-sighted. They feel things that the others don’t. One thing is for sure, if we don’t listen carefully, we’ll never see what needs to change in the system. We’ll be teaching them relaxation exercises for ever because they won’t work.

The anxiety isn’t the problem. It's the sign of a problem.

with Eliza Fricker Missing The Mark

For more like this, follow me on Substack.

https://naomicfisher.substack.com/p/it-will-get-easier/

02/03/2025

WHAT TO DO IF YOU ENCOUNTER ICE, ESPECIALLY IF YOU ARE WHITE.

Here's the deal:

🔘 Border Patrol can verify citizenship within 100 miles of a border or "external boundary." This includes coastlines, so NYC, Philadelphia, and all of NJ are within the 100-mile zone.

🔘 Border patrol can only ask brief questions about citizenship, and they cannot hold you for an extended time without cause.

🔘 You always have the right to remain silent. You do not need to answer their questions.

🔘 WITH THAT SAID, IF YOU ARE A BORN CITIZEN OF THE UNITED STATES AND ESPECIALLY IF YOU ARE WHITE, YOU NEED TO SPEAK THE F**K UP.

🔘 The most important acts of resistance are the small ones. Make it difficult and uncomfortable for ICE agents to do their jobs. They are counting on citizens to turn a blind eye and allow them to deport undocumented citizens without challenge. Disabuse of that notion.

🔘 If you are on a train, bus, or anything else and ICE or CBP boards, you need to stand up and loudly let everyone know that they have the right to remain silent or only answer questions in the presence of an attorney, no matter their citizenship or immigration status. There have been numerous reports that confronting the agents in this way has caused them to leave without verifying citizenship. THIS CAN SAVE LIVES. 🙌

🔘 If you see anyone being held up by immigration, loudly ask if they are being detained and if they are free to go.

🔘 Immigration officers cannot detain anyone without reasonable suspicion, an agent must have specific facts about you that make it reasonable to believe you are committing or committed, a violation of immigration law or federal law. If an agent detains you, you can ask for their basis for reasonable suspicion, and they should tell you.

🔘 Always say no to a search and let everyone know that they can and should refuse consent to a search.

🔘 They cannot search or arrest anyone without facts about that make it probable that they are committing, or committed, a violation of immigration law or federal law.

🔘 Silence alone meets neither of these standards. Nor does race or ethnicity alone suffice for either probable cause or reasonable suspicion

🔘 white citizens, you have a level of privilege which protects us from retaliation from ICE for being "rude" and making a scene, which makes it our DUTY to speak up and make sure people without the same privilege know their rights. GET LOUD. YELL. YELL IN SPANISH IF YOU KNOW IT. LET PEOPLE KNOW THEY DON'T HAVE TO SAY S**T. MAKE ICE UNCOMFORTABLE. THROW SAND IN THE GEARS OF WHITE SUPREMACY.

⭐️ Bonus info- ⭐️
🔘It is perfectly legal to record immigration agents as long as you are not on government property or at a port of entry. If your train/bus gets boarded, pull your phone out and start videotaping immediately.

🔘 If you are detained or see someone getting detained, get the agent's name, number, and any other identifying information. Get it on video if possible.

🔘 Contact the ACLU or your local Immigrant/Migrant support orgs if you see someone's rights being violated.

(this has been copy and pasted -- please do the same)

01/28/2025

Love this ❤️

Credit: We Are Teachers

01/13/2025

If you or someone you know with young children has been affected by the wildfires in Southern California, our partners at Help Me Grow National have deployed care coordinators to connect you in real-time with support and services, including food, shelter, health and mental health care, diapers and more.

01/13/2025

After a wildfire, parents question whether they should bring their children back to the impacted area. This resource offers guidance to parents and caregivers on deciding whether or not a child should return to their home or neighborhood after it was damaged in a .

Download this resource here: https://bit.ly/3DQRu34

01/11/2025

Our hearts are with all those affected by the wildfires in the Los Angeles area. For those displaced, injured, or who have lost loved ones, we send our deepest condolences. We are incredibly thankful for the tireless work of MFTs and first responders.

For those looking to make a difference, we've created a resource page with emergency assistance, donation options, mental health support, and opportunities to volunteer as a crisis counselor. You can find it here:
https://www.camft.org/CAMFTLAWildfiresResources

Address

Lomita, CA

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 4:30pm
Wednesday 9am - 5:30pm
Thursday 8:30am - 4:30pm

Telephone

+14242549393

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